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#regurgitated semen records
rp-kat · 5 years
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Fuck On The Beach & Flächenbrand - Split
1999
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Hey folks, it’s a been a while. We’ve been laying low while a few releases wrap up, and finally have some real news for you. Fri. May 12th copies of Holy Money’s The Language Machine LP will be live and for sale. The album is available for digital purchase and streaming on bandcamp now.
Holy Money’s The Language Machine is a sonically and conceptually heavy monolith that defies the “sludge” and “stoner” monikers lazily attached to most  slow, metallic bands. Realistically, Holy Money play death metal, but with rhythmic and hypnotic songwriting that borders on psychedelia instead of violence, gore, or aggression. To be sure, this album is brutal – but more like a J.G. Ballard novel than a Bolt Thrower record.
Six tracks contemplating human consciousness and communication over 46 minutes. Strongly recommended for enthusiasts of Corrupted, Bastard Noise, and DMT.
Limited to 500 copies. Including download code and 11x17 photocopied insert. Further details available later this week. Thank you, though, for your patience and support. Holy Money will celebrate the release of this LP at Walter’s (in Houston, TX) with Insect Warfare, Excruciating Terror, Captain Cleanoff, P.L.F., and Vulva Essers, on Thursday, May 18th.
@holymoneyfiendclub
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evolstak · 4 years
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NEVERENDING MIND WAR s/t one sided LP REGURGITATED SEMEN RECORDS RSR188 i loved their both demo cassette so fucking much, so this was what i was waiting for! both demos onto one side of 12" vinyl! fucking brilliant! https://www.instagram.com/p/CAQ7QhGDNxz-IMa1h9qbHfma2BWAXakSaNSq4M0/?igshid=1an5dm90exj7c
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noiseotaku · 6 years
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#GerogerigegegeWeek
The first week of October is Gerogerigegege Week. I’m starting it off with a doozy. The Gerogerigegege’s All You Need is Audio Shock 7″. Released by Regurgitated Semen Records in 1995. This version is a limited edition of one.
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athertonjc · 5 years
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Humming a love song..
Are they here yet? Are they here yet?
Reblooming ‘Major Wheeler’ coral honeysuckle provides hummingbird attracting flowers from very early spring to very late in fall.
As I write this today, millions of faces were peering out their windows at freshly filled hummingbird feeders. Friends south of them had reported their first sightings of the season, and goodness, what kind of human being would want to disappoint an early hummingbird?
I remember an April morning several years ago when a freak late season snowstorm was still spitting flurries when I stepped out to the porch. I was horrified to see a hummingbird hovering expectantly in the exact location of last summer’s feeders. If there is Guinness World Record for the speed of dissolving sugar in water, I broke it that day. My face was pressed to the glass until I saw him drink.
Salvia greggii ‘Glitter’ made a 3′ cushion of flowers in one growing season.
That experience convinced me that hummingbirds come back to the same feeders each year, and bless those people who band the feisty little birds and satisfied our curiosity, because it is confirmed that sometimes they do. I don’t know if hummingbirds dream, but if so, is it ever of my deck on Whippoorwill Hill? I choose to believe so.
There is no dispute over love for hummingbirds, but there is debate about sugar concentrations. Most hummingbird enthusiasts rely on the standard 1 part sugar to 4 parts water as the “best” recipe. However, when I learned that our native jewelweed (Impatiens capensis) has nectar measured at an astounding 43% sugar solution, I set out to research some of their other favorite flowers, and found that many of the salvias they frequent have concentrations in the 30% and higher range.
I knew that hummingbirds were primarily insectivores. As my birding friend put it, they are insect eating birds fueled by sugars. The sugar supplies the calories they need to maintain extremely high metabolic rates while seeking the insects they need.
I also found studies that compared feeding frequencies on a variety of solution concentrations. They revealed that hummingbirds fed less frequently on stronger solutions because they only require a certain number of calories per hour. After I read that, I was comfortable in making my solutions one part sugar to two parts water. Why would I want my hummingbirds to come less frequently? I am helping out little mama.
The female has a longer, leaner body, probably because she does all the work. The adult male’s red gorget does not always show if the light isn’t right.
She can grab a quick metabolic fix and tend to her many chores. Many people don’t know that male hummingbirds are deadbeat dads. All they do is supply the semen. They do not help build nests. They do not help incubate eggs or feed the female while she incubates, nor do they help feed the young. They just zoom around being bossy bad-asses at the feeders and looking sparkly, while she is scrapping to feed the young’uns. She must harvest thousands of tiny insects and regurgitate them mixed with nectar into the mouths of the babes, all the while fighting off starvation for herself. Damn right I’m giving her some of the good stuff.
Besides, there is no lessening of activity at my feeders as far as I can tell. Word must be out that the feeders at Whippoorwill Hill are supplying virtual hummingbird crack. At peak late summer early fall migration, as the birds are moving back down the continent, I’ll be running eight 48 oz feeders that will require a refill every other day. I buy so much sugar at the grocery store they probably think I’m making moonshine.
I “captured” some of the explosive jewelweed seeds and managed to establish some of this reseeding annual in my shady areas near the house. Angus doesn’t care.
Not coincidentally, this coincides with the bloom time of jewelweed, a common wildflower in our bottomlands. These blooms are especially adapted for hummingbird pollination, and the hummingbirds are benefit from the rich sugar content to build up a little reserve for the big southern push ahead.
Of course, I also plant lots of the hummingbirds’ favorite flowers, especially salvias, both annual and perennial forms. Luckily there are many that reliably return for me here in west Tennessee, a Zone 7, among them selections of Salvia greggii, microphylla and guaranitica. I’ve already purchased five more this spring to add to the growing collection. The blooming plants are not only nectar sources but attract those all-important insects. Oh, and I like looking at pretty flowers too, so there is that.
Remember attracting insects is a goal, so not all plants have to be nectar providing “hummingbird plants”.
But back to the less selfish, I am more than a little touched by how many human beings provide for these little birds. Here is the annual spring scenario viewed from outer space. If we had supercalifragilisticexpialidocious eyesight, we would see millions of tiny hummingbirds dispersing up the North American continent, completely unaware of how many million humans are expectantly preparing for them. These hummingbirds have absolutely no idea how many thousands of people are writing and underlining SUGAR! on the grocery list, or scrubbing their feeders, or looking for hummingbird plants at garden centers. They don’t know we love them. They don’t care. They don’t thank us.
In a time when it seems especially easy to be angry with fellow humans, does that not make you smile? Keep peering, lovers and friends, they are on the way.
Humming a love song.. originally appeared on GardenRant on March 28, 2019.
from GardenRant https://www.gardenrant.com/2019/03/humming-a-love-song.html
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wendyimmiller · 5 years
Text
Humming a love song..
Are they here yet? Are they here yet?
Reblooming ‘Major Wheeler’ coral honeysuckle provides hummingbird attracting flowers from very early spring to very late in fall.
As I write this today, millions of faces were peering out their windows at freshly filled hummingbird feeders. Friends south of them had reported their first sightings of the season, and goodness, what kind of human being would want to disappoint an early hummingbird? I remember an April morning several years ago when a freak late season snowstorm was still spitting flurries when I stepped out to the porch. I was horrified to see a hummingbird hovering expectantly in the exact location of last summer’s feeders. If there is Guinness World Record for the speed of dissolving sugar in water, I broke it that day. My face was pressed to the glass until I saw him drink.
Salvia greggii ‘Glitter’ made a 3′ cushion of flowers in one growing season.
That experience convinced me that hummingbirds come back to the same feeders each year, and bless those people who band the feisty little birds and satisfied our curiosity, because it is confirmed that sometimes they do. I don’t know if hummingbirds dream, but if so, is it ever of my deck on Whippoorwill Hill? I choose to believe so. There is no dispute over love for hummingbirds, but there is debate about sugar concentrations. Most hummingbird enthusiasts rely on the standard 1 part sugar to 4 parts water as the “best” recipe. However, when I learned that our native jewelweed (Impatiens capensis) has nectar measured at an astounding 43% sugar solution, I set out to research some of their other favorite flowers, and found that many of the salvias they frequent have concentrations in the 30% and higher range. I knew that hummingbirds were primarily insectivores. As my birding friend put it, they are insect eating birds fueled by sugars. The sugar supplies the calories they need to maintain extremely high metabolic rates while seeking the insects they need. I also found studies that compared feeding frequencies on a variety of solution concentrations. They revealed that hummingbirds fed less frequently on stronger solutions because they only require a certain number of calories per hour. After I read that, I was comfortable in making my solutions one part sugar to two parts water. Why would I want my hummingbirds to come less frequently? I am helping out little mama.
The female has a longer, leaner body, probably because she does all the work. The adult male’s red gorget does not always show if the light isn’t right.
She can grab a quick metabolic fix and tend to her many chores. Many people don’t know that male hummingbirds are deadbeat dads. All they do is supply the semen. They do not help build nests. They do not help incubate eggs or feed the female while she incubates, nor do they help feed the young. They just zoom around being bossy bad-asses at the feeders and looking sparkly, while she is scrapping to feed the young’uns. She must harvest thousands of tiny insects and regurgitate them mixed with nectar into the mouths of the babes, all the while fighting off starvation for herself. Damn right I’m giving her some of the good stuff. Besides, there is no lessening of activity at my feeders as far as I can tell. Word must be out that the feeders at Whippoorwill Hill are supplying virtual hummingbird crack. At peak late summer early fall migration, as the birds are moving back down the continent, I’ll be running eight 48 oz feeders that will require a refill every other day. I buy so much sugar at the grocery store they probably think I’m making moonshine.
I “captured” some of the explosive jewelweed seeds and managed to establish some of this reseeding annual in my shady areas near the house. Angus doesn’t care.
Not coincidentally, this coincides with the bloom time of jewelweed, a common wildflower in our bottomlands. These blooms are especially adapted for hummingbird pollination, and the hummingbirds are benefit from the rich sugar content to build up a little reserve for the big southern push ahead. Of course, I also plant lots of the hummingbirds’ favorite flowers, especially salvias, both annual and perennial forms. Luckily there are many that reliably return for me here in west Tennessee, a Zone 7, among them selections of Salvia greggii, microphylla and guaranitica. I’ve already purchased five more this spring to add to the growing collection. The blooming plants are not only nectar sources but attract those all-important insects. Oh, and I like looking at pretty flowers too, so there is that.
Remember attracting insects is a goal, so not all plants have to be nectar providing “hummingbird plants”.
But back to the less selfish, I am more than a little touched by how many human beings provide for these little birds. Here is the annual spring scenario viewed from outer space. If we had supercalifragilisticexpialidocious eyesight, we would see millions of tiny hummingbirds dispersing up the North American continent, completely unaware of how many million humans are expectantly preparing for them. These hummingbirds have absolutely no idea how many thousands of people are writing and underlining SUGAR! on the grocery list, or scrubbing their feeders, or looking for hummingbird plants at garden centers. They don’t know we love them. They don’t care. They don’t thank us. In a time when it seems especially easy to be angry with fellow humans, does that not make you smile? Keep peering, lovers and friends, they are on the way.
Humming a love song.. originally appeared on GardenRant on March 28, 2019.
from Gardening https://www.gardenrant.com/2019/03/humming-a-love-song.html via http://www.rssmix.com/
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notnice1983 · 8 years
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Regurgitated Semen Records
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rp-kat · 6 years
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Carcass Grinder & Agathocles - Cgarchy & Screenfreak
死体粉砕機 & Agathocles - Cgarchy & Screenfreak
1995
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PREMIERE STREAMING: SEX PRISONER “CREAKING DOOR” (CVLT NATION)
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vdonaldv · 10 years
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Weekend Nachos/Wojczech - Live at Fluff Fest 7"
This 7" features both live sets of the bands at Fluff Fest, Czech Republic from 2012...I saw them there and was quite surprised that Weekend Nachos had some of these at their Europe Tour this year even before they were officially out.  Give the record a listen: http://rsrandhateapeproductions.bandcamp.com/track/weekend-nachos-live-at-fluff-fest And if you enjoy it, buy it: http://rsrec.bigcartel.com/product/rsr-148-weekend-nachos-wojczech-split-7-limited-release-gig-edition (Or in any other Shop) Support the Label: https://www.facebook.com/pages/RSRec-Hate-Ape-Prod/167259523318351
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toxiccityblog · 10 years
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The Endless Blockade - Split w/ Wadge
Year: 2010
Label: Regurgitated Semen Records
  After hearing about Boyd Rice’s tiki obsession, I didn’t know how much further the tiki aesthetic could go in the punk circuit. Enter Wadge, Canada’s main purveyors of tiki-grind. This is an excellent split. Wadge’s side is interesting and weird as hell without being stupid, and The Endless Blockade rips it apart in a way that only a band of that caliber could. The only thing terrible about this split is the name of the label that put it out. Only in Germany, I guess. This record was originally pressed on black vinyl and repressed on orange translucent vinyl. 50 copies with an alternate cover exist.
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vinylnerdxxx · 11 years
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Crom/Agoraphobic Nosebleed split. 1st pressing, 500 copies on red vinyl, Regurgitated Semen Records.
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